STATES OF MIND kind of celestial lottery. "Develop the beginnings of populism in space and the beginnings of citizen involvement by initiating a tourism program for the American people," Gingrich recom- mends, for "Americans who have paid the taxes deserve to enjoy some of the benefits." He blames the "welfare state" for the decision not to move more quickly into space. "Even as Jimmy Carter told us we were suffering from malaise, Americans were going to see 'Star Wars,' " Gingrich writes. The confidence of Gingrich's tone and the eccentricities of his thinking make some of his fellow-conservatives uneasy. They adore him for his power and admire him for his ability to disci- pline the House Republicans, but they are anxious because, unlike much of the press, they know his work. "For my taste, Gingrich is too futuristic, too psychobabble, too technobabble-he's a weird mishmash of all kinds of things," a leading conservative ideologue told me. "There is an ongoing attempt to try to keep Newt from going off the deep end. There's a certain grandiosity to his self-understanding which comes from Tomer, an end-of-an-era, the-whole- world-is-changing feeling he projects. The RepublIcan Presidential candidates being proposed are really more conven- tional than Newt." Many of the intellectual redoubts of Reaganism are still in place or have spawned newer versions of themselves. The Heritage Foundation is ascendant once more. The neoconservative scion William Kristol (he is the son of Irving Kristol and Gertrude Himmelfarb) thrived as QIayle's closest adviser dur- ing the Bush years and is now the lead- ing Beltway philosopher for Republi- cans. Bartley's editorial page, which alternates supply-side alchemy and per- sonal attack, is the main influence on the tone of the conservative discussion The Free Press, under Adam Bellow (Saul's son), has become the conservative pub- lishing house of choice, finding huge au- diences for "The Real Anita Hill" and "The Bell Curve," among other books. Rush Limbaugh, whose reach increases all the time, popularizes the Reaganite creed for at least twenty million loyal lis- teners every week. Some of these same conservatives know that as a futurist Gingrich has a spotty record. On the most important Teaching isn't Just a Job. It's a profession with a strong moral dimension We have dedicated our new Master of Science in Teaching program to educating a new generation of teachers to be agents of change in the schools. Come to an Open House and learn about our approach to becoming a secondary school teacher Meet the director, faculty, current students, admissions and financial aid counselors to see whether your commitments match ours To attend the Open House or for additional information, please call our advising office at 2 I 2 81 o SHOULD TEACH? 229 563 0 9The New School ( Master of Science in Teaching ) COURSES, CONTROVERSY AND ENLIGHTENMENT SINCE 1919 66 West 12th Street, New York, NY 10011 A MES5AGE TO c _tIlt rey I rnrny n e e.t" cieSa.. OUR READERS: n ,W """""II K , - 8 B e't r 'f uCk1.ey ... ill\ .. i- We are pleased to announce that J ! Iff f it f' UU most of the original art work pub- riD el ro ert . lished in The New Yorker's Fashion f{ ðl,lN (J ... on c : Issue, November 7, 1994, is avail- .! I . I U) BJÚAN able for sale. The New Yorker will . . It · · n nlt - I forward all proceeds to Gay Men's cay amilton f I r- -. Health Crisis. G .M.H. C. is the " j -j gUJ mtlne mes oldest and largest t tlßgt AIDS servIce EY .. :. T I , organization, providing direct ser- II , f/ II' vices for men, women, and children I LUAMOI. .".. i" II'J'V?"" with H.LV. and AIDS in New York V> as ì'e 1:- In : /.... g sß i s.. City, and education and advocacy J I -. . i nè Vi worldwide. If you are interested in it bu . a . . m' en lie purchasing any of the art work, ,flU 0: - l please call (212) 536-5864 for fur- , -R . ROYJ on I<ARR e:. ther details and a price list. '" R air stylISt 0 - nthony I arllst . - pp I If V IJI THE NEW YORKER